If
I were drawing up my literary bucket list, Zombie Novel wouldn't be
on it. But there's a first time for everything. And how better to
dip my toe in the genre than with respected literary novelist Colson
Whitehead? So with some trepidation I stepped into Zone
One.
The
story is set mainly in Manhattan, in the section south of Canal,
where the narrator, nicknamed Mark Spitz, is part of a team of three
“sweepers” searching for “skels” - short for sleletons. The
word zombie is never used, but these skels are the walking dead and
they feed on human flesh, so you get the picture. An unexplained
plague has struck the world, and those unaffected are attempting to
seal off a section of the island as a safe zone, while unnamed powers
in Buffalo devise the structure of a new civilization. All survivors
suffer from P.A.S.D. (post-apocalyptic stress disorder), but Spitz, a
self-proclaimed slacker who was content in his mediocrity, functions
better than most because his expectations are low and he views his
situation with clear-eyed honesty. And yet, his flashbacks reveal a
touching tenderness and sadness for what has been lost.
The
story covers just three days. Whitehead's prose may seem
over-wrought early in the book, but he is masterful at conveying grim
humor, horror and tenderness, with social commentary stirred in. I
can't compare this to other zombie novels, but let me just say this -
the third day is scary, scary, scary.
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